I have to agree with you. I was, for 3 years, a Videotron subscriber, and I have to say that it was a miracle they were in business. They have absolutely the worst service levels I've ever encountered, and they are such a non-customer focused organization that it's not surprising at all that they're going to give in and try to save some face within their own special circles.
anything that takes a chunk out of videotron's market is a good thing. i spend 2 years being 'fortunate' enough dealing with videotron, and am fully behind any initiative that takes a market share away from them. too bad i live in calgary now!
i think it is a personality trait of the 'geek', and the hacker more specifically, to be interested in broadening their knowledge base. this is seen from people who run different OS's on one rig to people who own all sorts of 'How-to' books. Hackers are no longer cyber, they're actual.
I have to agree with you. I was, for 3 years, a Videotron subscriber, and I have to say that it was a miracle they were in business. They have absolutely the worst service levels I've ever encountered, and they are such a non-customer focused organization that it's not surprising at all that they're going to give in and try to save some face within their own special circles.
anything that takes a chunk out of videotron's market is a good thing. i spend 2 years being 'fortunate' enough dealing with videotron, and am fully behind any initiative that takes a market share away from them. too bad i live in calgary now!
i think it is a personality trait of the 'geek', and the hacker more specifically, to be interested in broadening their knowledge base. this is seen from people who run different OS's on one rig to people who own all sorts of 'How-to' books. Hackers are no longer cyber, they're actual.